The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Victimhood & Self-sabotage Is Destroying The World In 2022: Africa Brooke
Episode Date: July 14, 2022Africa Brooke is a speaker and podcast host, who has built a community that has helped hundreds of thousands of young people navigate the unique pressures of the world today. From binge drinking to ca...ncel culture, sexual empowerment to race and politics - Africa isn’t afraid to speak completely honestly and frankly about anything. No one has come in to speak to us with as much honesty and vulnerability as Africa. This is a one-of-a-kind conversation that left us speechless. There's never a topic on Diary of a CEO that’s off-limits, we will always bring you the world’s leading people telling their honest truth. What to make of their opinions is up to you, but as soon as Africa walked through the door of my kitchen to record, any pre-conceptions of what she was about to say were left on the other side. She certainly didn’t hold anything back. Follow Africa: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/africabrooke/ Website - https://africabrooke.com/ Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. If I'm not drinking or
snorting something, what the fuck do I actually enjoy doing? You know, who am I?
Africa Brooke is a speaker, a podcast host,
and she's helped hundreds of thousands of people see the world in a new light.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Africa does not give a fuck, and that's why I love her.
If you're on the left, then you're the good person.
If you're on the right, then you're the bad person.
We're hanging out online where these platforms incentivize binary thinking are you with us or are you against us there's only
so much you can take most people didn't like when i said that as a black person i'm not oppressed
that there is a very real difference between being a victim and making victimhood an identity because
if you don't think that you're worthy, that's
always going to be the belief that you feed every single time. What became your dark side?
From the age of 14, I was a blackout drinker.
That's when I started to see that I was behaving in the exact same way that my dad did. Sex and sexuality. Can you talk to me about what you've learned
about those topics that might benefit me? Well. Without further ado, I'm Stephen Bartlett,
and this is The Diary of a CEO. I hope nobody's listening, but if you are, then please keep this to yourself.
Africa, let's, I mean, if you've seen this podcast before, it's no surprise where I'm going to start. But I was reading about your story.
I was reading about where you grew up and where you were originally born.
Give me your earliest, most relevant context. Give me the
context of where you came from and how that context shaped the person that sits here with me today.
Oh, that's good. So I'm Zimbabwean. I'm from Zimbabwe. And I think this accent always fools
people into thinking that I was born and raised here. But I was born in Zimbabwe, which is in the
south of Africa. And I came to the UK when I was nine years old. So I remember my life back home
in Zimbabwe quite clearly and vividly, actually. I don't remember it being hard, apart from
my experiences with my father. Even though he could be the most charming man and he was such a
beautiful man he was the kind of person that walks into a room and you can feel that Maxwell has
arrived just a very beautiful spirit but when he was drunk he could be very different completely
different so I think the times that I can remember experiencing most of my sadness or frustration as a child was experiencing that side of my father because he could be very abusive and he was physically abusive to my mum and to myself and my siblings.
But I don't even look at those things and think that I had a horrible childhood in Zimbabwe.
I have so many wonderful, wonderful memories of being home and I still call it home you know when people ask me
where I'm from I always say Zimbabwe before I say the UK or that I'm British um yeah you know when
you say that you look back on Zimbabwe with fond memories yeah um is that because at the time when in your household you didn't understand
that behavior you didn't understand that it was bad behavior or that it was abnormal
or is it genuinely because on balance you you consider it to be a
a happy childhood yeah I think it's actually the latter. I think I definitely understood that this wasn't right. Although, to be honest, there were a lot of behaviors that my father exhibited that were considered normal just because of the culture. For example, things like disciplining your wife through hitting her, etc, etc, or your children. It was just kind of seen as normal. But I definitely knew that it wasn't right. I definitely knew that
there was a problem. I knew that seeing a person that is that drunk was not something that felt
comfortable. It wasn't remotely normal. And I'm able to now, I think in adulthood, hold multiple
truths, which is something, interestingly enough, that I speak about a lot of my work, the importance
of being able to hold multiple truths. Because like I say about my dad, I saw him as a bad person. I saw him as an evil person even, and he passed
away in 2004. And I never mourned his death because of the resentment that I was holding
towards him. But then when I got sober years later, I had to hold multiple truths about him to realize that he was a beautiful man.
I got to experience him in the very early years of my life as being a very present father, as being a very loving father before alcohol came into his life in the way that it did.
So I had to then start holding multiple truths about him because it wasn't
all bad. So I think I hold those fond memories because I've had to realize that they did actually
exist beyond everything else. You said in your teen years, you started to realize that he'd been,
um, how bad he'd been to your mother. Yeah. How did you start to realize that at that age through stories um
through speaking to my siblings about what we had all experienced in the home because we never
really spoke I I don't know what it's like in your family or when you were growing up but we never
really spoke about much especially when it came to things that were potentially
hard to talk about, things that revolved around emotions and being vulnerable,
things that had anything to do with intimacy or a lack of intimacy. Even the most obvious things,
like seeing my mum being hit and not talking about it, almost just pretending that it didn't happen.
So I think in adulthood, when I started seeing how other families were,
when I started to see how open other people are,
I then started to see the lack in what I had experienced growing up.
So I think that's when I started to kind of want, I wanted to know more.
Did anyone else see what was happening?
Did my aunts and uncles know what was happening?
Why didn't anyone talk about it? why didn't anyone talk to us why so i think i had so many why type of questions which
fueled a lot of my resentment yeah some of the times you used that you said before alcohol showed
up in his life as you'll know um these things tend to we tend to attract these things into our
lives usually as as you describe it as a a firmer lid to hold some trauma i think there's some
terminology used previously um in some some of your work yeah did you ever understand the trauma
that he was trying to um bottle up using alcohol you know what that's something that is
still unfolding because i think there's only so far that other family members will go in terms
of really telling me and my siblings or anyone else that wants to know the reality of what was
really going on but i think he was also from a family where people didn't really have many conversations his
younger brother had committed suicide when he was 26 and there were other instances of mental
health and that wasn't really spoken about as well, because culturally people just didn't talk
about these things. So I think there were things that he was suppressing that I'll never, ever know
about. So I think I've had to make peace with the fact that I won't be able to get all of the answers
as to why and how. I just have to understand what did happen and what I experienced and forgive where I can get answers where I can and also let go
of expectations I had a guest on this podcast called Tim Grover and he he talked about his
early upbringing he was he ended up being Michael Jordan's and Kobe Bryant's trainer and he says
that um our childhood experiences tend to create our brilliance but they also create our dark side
and he referred to it as his dark side he He told me about his dark side. Dark side can sometimes mean insecurities. It can
mean the worst traits or character flaws within us. But from the experience you had,
what became your dark side?
That's a fantastic question. You know what? I ended up replicating pretty much the same
drinking behavior that my dad had from the age of 14 up until 24 when I finally got sober. So
a decade long. I was a blackout drinker. I was a binge drinker very specifically. I didn't know
when to stop because my intention was never to stop from the
first time that I drunk. It's almost as if something magical happened. I realized that I
could change who I was, that I didn't have to feel insecure anymore, that I didn't have to think about
the areas in which I'm different, the areas in which can lead to me being abandoned
because I'm different. And what I mean specifically by that is when I came to the UK when I was nine
years old, I always say this and I will continue saying it because it was one of the, it's something
that I laugh at, but it was quite big. It was the first time that I realized that I'm black, I had never, Stephen, had to think about it before,
ever had to think about it. But we moved to Kent when in 2001, when we first came to the country.
And in my school, it was probably me and my sister and one other boy called Curtis.
We were the only black kids in the entire school. And I know you've shared your
similar experiences with kind of just seeing just how much you stand out in an environment that you
have to be in. And we were living in Kent for about three years, and then we moved to London.
But the imprint was already made, the insecurity around who I was as a young black girl. When I moved to London, it was completely different
because now I was seen as pretty. I was seen as attractive, but that was also very confusing in
itself because I still didn't quite fit in because now to most of the black people that I was around,
I was white because of the way that I spoke. by the time I was 14 and I drunk alcohol for
the first time it sort of silenced all of those things I remember it was in a park with some
friends and the more that I drunk the more confident I became or so I thought um and the
more that I just felt at ease in myself and in my body and with the
people around me, even though I didn't start binge drinking or blackout drinking from that moment,
an imprint had been made, a pattern started to develop that every time that I drunk from that
time, the intention was to get fucked up. The intention was to experience that same level of comfort and confidence that I felt that first time.
And I tried and did replicate that same pattern over and over and over and over again for 10 years.
And that's when I started to see that I was behaving in the exact same way that my dad did.
So I think that's the sort of shadow that started to form.
Lying.
That became a habit of yours.
It did. Compulsive lying.
What was compulsive lying doing for you on a psychological level?
What was it allowing you to escape from or escape where
to was it allowing you to escape to it was allowing me to feel accepted it was
allowing me to sort of create my own world because the world that I'd been in, a world where someone that was supposed to protect me and
my siblings and my family did the complete opposite and damaged our family in a very, very,
very big way. I remember that it did start in Zimbabwe when I would be at school and I was
quite young, maybe even six, probably around six or seven. I would go to school and I was quite young, maybe even six, probably around six or seven,
I would go to school and sort of tell other kids about my dad and who he was and how amazing he
was and all these things that he would do. And parts of it were true, but most of it wasn't.
Most of it was just me trying to create a reality that I could live with, a reality that made me feel safe, a reality that
made me feel comfortable, a reality that other people could sort of step into for a moment and
think, wow, that's incredible. So therefore it would make me incredible in some kind of way.
So I think I started to get rewarded for that. And then it just became habitual because any time that I felt like I wasn't fitting in in the way that I wanted to or that things were happening within our home that were just very uncomfortable.
And I didn't, again, have the language for that.
It was all just feeling, knowing that something is quite wrong.
I would then go into a different environment and just create a story. And when you were speaking to example,
I think he was talking about something similar in relation to lying, where he was saying kind
of embellishing the truth, if you will, to kind of create a story. And I resonated with that so
much because I think that's exactly what it was for me, just trying to create a different world.
And when alcohol was a part of that as well it was just even more explosive and I think there
was something quite addictive about that being able to create your own reality and convince
other people that that reality is actually true so it would it was definitely a big part of my
drinking something that would come out it's so interesting because when you were describing why
you lied a lot of people listen to this and think well i can't relate because i'm not a liar
yeah the lens in which i sort of heard that through is um pretty much everyone listening
to this is lying for the same reason the words you used were to create a reality then you said
i would be rewarded for when i found it better to live in. And if you think about an Instagram filter.
Yeah, yes.
That's a form of creating a world where you feel more comfortable and get more rewards for.
Even like the selection of the online identity that some of us create where we show just the very best or we try and change how we look or whatever.
That is surely a form of lying to get better rewards and
to to create a world where you feel more comfortable and safer to live in yes like you
you know and so lying is not just saying something which is not true it's a morphing of one's
identity to create a safer i guess identity or story yeah that the world might reward you for
but in doing so you obviously abandon yourself exactly so it's like um another
word that comes to mind as we talk about is it's deception right it's a form of of deception and i
think it for me it was not even just about deceiving other people it was deceiving myself
so that i could live with myself better you know if i see myself through this lens um but yeah it's very
interesting how we can hear certain words and think no that doesn't that doesn't resonate with
me I don't do that but then it just shows up very subtly in the things we do every single day
but yeah lying was a was a huge thing was a huge huge thing for me and it's something that I really
had to look dead in the eye when I got sober six years ago um yeah going back to that period where you were drinking and you were
engaging in certain abandonment style behaviors to try and escape from you know this um who you
were what is the cost of abandoning yourself what is the cost I know it's quite a profound thing but
what was the cost for you of
that continual for almost 10 years finding ways to abandon yourself the cost was that I I never got
to know myself I never got to know myself not in the ways that I really wanted to anyway I got I
got to know the version of me that I thought people wanted. So I wasted a lot of time
doing that. And there was also a very real mental cost because waking up next to someone,
not knowing where you are, not knowing if you've had sex with that person, there's a huge
mental cost to that. On your self-esteem, it fuels a lot of shame. It fuels a lot of guilt
because I would be in relationships sometimes when these things would happen. Not, not have I
cheated on my partner or was this just something innocent because my clothes are still on?
So it, it really, really had a huge mental cost. So there was a lot of anxiety. There was a lot of insecurity.
I would even say, you know, a low level paranoia, because when you wake up not knowing whether
you've done something, but feeling like you will need to apologize for something,
going through my phone, just to have an idea of what I've done or what I didn't do, who was I
with? How did I end up all the way in fucking Surrey when I was in Soho
not too long ago um so there was a huge mental cost but also there was a spiritual cost because
just like I said right a few moments ago not getting to know yourself and then getting sober
further down the line and feeling like you're a newborn baby.
I didn't even know what I like to do.
What the fuck do I actually enjoy doing?
If I'm not drinking or smoking something or snorting something,
what do I actually, what do I enjoy?
You know, who am I as an individual without all of those things?
Can I even be by myself? So there was a
huge spiritual cost. And once I realized the cost of all of those things, it was around the same
time that I discovered the concept of self-sabotage, right? When you get in your own way.
And that helped me so much just to even have that language to understand what this thing
actually was, why i had
been in the destructive cycle for such a long time um i want to just on that point of the destructive
cycle because when you were explaining waking up you know um the next day somewhere you don't know
you don't know what you've done the night before and that giving you guilt it hurting your self-worth
it's yeah it was my brain was going,
well, this was meant to be the medicine
for a lack of self-worth.
Yes.
And it ends up taking even more of your self-worth.
So it's this kind of race to the bottom of your self-esteem
by thinking that the medication
is this kind of destructive abandonment behavior.
And that's weirdly self-reinforcing.
So you do it to try and escape,
but it harms you so much that you need that maybe that sort of surface level attention the alcohol even more so that
leads you in the same place and that vicious cycle to the bottom of your self-esteem right
and trying to pick yourself up out of that is one hell of a task oh yeah it's probably one of the
most grueling things I've done which is why
actually I'm actually very grateful for all of those times that I did relapse because I think
I was reminded every single time just how much I wanted to break this fucking cycle
and how much I had to, because it's so, anything that is familiar, anything that is familiar
feels safe in some way, even though objectively it might look like, how is this person not
changing their life? Clearly they're losing everyone around them. And I'm talking about
myself, losing everyone around them, can't even stay in any job for longer than a month,
unable to commit to anything, incredibly unreliable. How can they not see that something
needs to change? But the thing is, when you are in that cycle of self-destruction, self-sabotage,
if it feels familiar, it's kind of all you know, that when I would have those bursts of sobriety where I'd be sober for three months and six months and I didn't have any chaos, I didn't have any drama.
I was reliable.
People were saying that they're proud of me.
You know, I could see that I was doing well.
It made me uncomfortable.
It made me uncomfortable because it didn't feel familiar. And there was
always this thing in the back of my mind that would sort of say, you're going to fuck up anyway.
So might as well just, might as well just do it now, you know? And that's when the justifications
would come. Things like, I haven't had a drink in six months. So maybe if I just have one,
it's going to be different, you you know or I would say things like um
I have a problem with alcohol but cocaine is not the problem so maybe I can still have a line
every now and again and then you know and then I can still be with my friends and so all of these
justifications but when I really looked at it I was uncomfortable with my life actually being drama free, chaos free and being reliable, being able to be there for the people that I that I love.
Because I was just so comfortable in that destruction.
And I chose that every single time until until I didn't until I couldn't. If someone's listening to this and they're in one of those sort of downward, negatively reinforcing self-esteem cycles,
where you're carrying out a behavior because you have low self-esteem,
but then that behavior is actually resulting in a lowering of your self-esteem.
It can be a toxic relationship where you're staying because they took your self-esteem.
So you think that they're the ones that can give it back, but they're hurting you even more.
I see that a lot in my DMs.
Or it can be other.
What advice would you give to someone to try and break out of that negatively reinforcing self-esteem cycle?
I think one of the things, I think questions are always the best place to start.
I always like to think of self-sabotage and self-destruction as self-protection.
You're actually protecting yourself from something.
And a lot of it is unconscious. You're not consciously deciding to get in your own way.
You're not consciously deciding to stay in chaos and drama because you just absolutely love it.
Maybe for some people that might be the case, but for most of us, it's entirely unconscious.
But I think getting clear on what the benefits are,
because you're getting some kind of reward from it, right?
Because if you don't think that you're worthy,
if you don't think that you're lovable,
that's always going to be the belief that you feed every single time.
It's some kind of confirmation.
It's like a, see, I said that I wasn't unlovable.
That's why I choose someone who shouts at mevable that's why I choose someone who shouts at me that's why I choose someone who manipulates me that's why I choose someone who
cheats on me over and over again that's why I choose someone who shames me or whatever the
details might be so I think there's always some kind of reward that we're getting from that
situation and I think it can be a very sounds quite abstract but I think it can be a very, sounds quite abstract, but I think it can be an
important question to ask yourself, what reward am I actually getting from this? And is this going
to be worth it in the long term? And all of this to me, it kind of sounds like shifting your identity
and what you're used to and allowing yourself to get used to things that might not be familiar yet.
I think you also have to understand that when you're breaking some kind of cycle, it's going
to be uncomfortable. That's why I'm a huge advocate for discomfort, because I think you also have to understand that when you're breaking some kind of cycle, it's going to
be uncomfortable. That's why I'm a huge advocate for discomfort, because I think a lot of us,
when we change a pattern, the moment we feel uncomfortable, even though it's good for us,
the moment we feel uncomfortable, we pull the plug. And we often pull the plug so prematurely.
So I think one of the things that I would suggest, and I say this to my clients and
anyone that I speak to, allow yourself to be in that discomfort because a lot of the time it's
where you currently are with your identity and the identity that you're trying to step into,
someone who is more lovable, for example, but that middle part is going to be quite uncomfortable
and you just have to stay there while things sort of reconfigure
is that like because you're contending against two counter narratives or counter stories yes
yes and it takes time to believe a new story so you're gonna have to sit in maybe a feeling of him
feeling like a bit of an imposter or you know what i mean it's almost like it's evidence
right at the end of the day all these stories are backed by either true or, but it's subjective evidence of who you are and what the world thinks of me
and what I'm capable of.
So rewriting new evidence is not an easy or a quick.
No, no.
And it's not supposed to be.
Because I think we also have this idea that it's supposed to be easy.
You know, that kind of once you make a decision
and you decide that you're going to do it, that it should just work. And if it doesn't, if it's uncomfortable, that means it's wrong.
That means you should pull the plug. That's not, that's not always the case.
What do you still self-sabotage with, or how do you still self-sabotage?
You know what it is for me romantic relationships and it always helps me
when i'm very honest about the fact that this is an area where i still have self-sabotaging
tendencies so what that looks like is feeling when someone is trying to get close to me, I will immediately start to feel suffocated.
I'll start to feel like I need to find something wrong with you so that you don't get too close,
even if I want you to get close.
But it's because there's a part of me doesn't want to be vulnerable because vulnerability
in that area means being exposed.
It means being raw.
Exposed to what?
Exposed.
Vulnerable to what?
You know what I think it is?
I think it's a, to put it very simply, I think it's a feeling of,
if you really get to know me, you might abandon me.
And I think this is not something that's even,
you know, on a conscious level, because I have a strong sense of self, I know who I am, etc, etc.
But I think there is still those sort of traces from childhood, from everything that I've
experienced in my life, that those remnants of that, that have that voice that say if I really let you in and you actually
get to know me you might abandon me so what I need to do I need to find a way to get in there first
and abandon you before you abandon me so that might look like as I said once the person is
starting to kind of get close I will feel suffocated I'll feel like okay it's getting too much I need my own space
what's what's wrong with you danger yeah huh danger um where did you learn that model that
a romantic relationship might be danger oh gosh I mean take a guess take a guess the the
first relationship that I ever saw a man and a woman, a couple being together was my mother and
my father. And that's the model in which I had to kind of build my own idea of romantic love and
what relationships look like. So I've never wanted to get too close. And I could never have said this
to you before. I didn't have language for it. But when I looked at the patterns from relationship to relationship, I always saw that they had a timeline as well. Never going anywhere
beyond the one year mark. Always feeling like, okay, that's enough. We've done our time. Let's
let's really Yeah. So I think romantic relationships is one And I also had one in terms of money. And this one, I really had to
nip it in the butt when I started my consulting firm five years ago. I used to sabotage any
opportunity to potentially make more money than my mom. So my mom is a nurse. So when I started sharing my sobriety story and I started realizing that
I'm actually very good at what I do in terms of speaking, in terms of supporting people,
I'm a very curious person and I do have a powerful story, a powerful story that allows
me to reach so many different types of people. So it gained a lot of traction quite early on in 2016,
2017. So I would start getting speaking
opportunities in the beginning, everything was sort of free. And I was okay with that never had
to negotiate things around money. Money was not something that was spoken about in my family
growing up. I don't know what it was like for you. But the only time that money conversations
were really had was through arguments. You would only hear money spoken
about where there wasn't enough money, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. So I always had
so many different money stories. Money is very hard to come by. Money doesn't grow on trees.
You have to work hard for money. So many ideas about rich people, rich people are bad,
rich people are this. And no one in my family explicitly said
that, but I think culturally it was sort of just a thing. People don't have to explicitly say it
culturally. We all know what the stories are. So when I would hear or get emails saying,
Africa, we'd love for you to speak of this thing. It's just half an hour. What is your rate? We're
offering 3k. Um, I would just experience so much discomfort knowing that
my mum is working so many hours as a nurse on her feet and she's probably making half of that or
just about that so what I would do and this was not a conscious thing until I started looking at
my money story I would let those emails sit. Any email that was saying I
would be getting paid, I would let those emails sit until it was too late. They probably offered
someone else because I just felt so uncomfortable making money so easily. So I would sabotage any
opportunity to get paid. But if it was free, I will reply straight away. I'll do it. But when you're in business, that doesn't fucking work.
It doesn't work.
But even outside of that, I was shown that because I was incapable of receiving when it came to money, I was incapable of receiving in so many areas.
I was incapable of receiving love fully because when I did, I would shut down because a part of me thinks I don't deserve it I was incapable of receiving opportunities because I'd feel like this has happened way too easily
I'm supposed to it's supposed to be hard but this is so easy so I would be suspicious of it and
sabotage it so those are the two main areas that I've really had to do some work on over the past
years on the first point um you were very much preaching
to the choir there as i've talked about quite a few times on this podcast why do i see relationships
as like a bird trapped in a cage or someone trapped in jail well okay well that's what my
father was my father was trapped my father my whole life i was convinced he was trapped that
was my first model of what a romantic relationship was so of course it was the most
um most evidence-backed yeah and so you gotta it's similar to what we were talking about earlier
about like stepping into a new story yes and although every part of your being is going this
is bad you gotta stay you do communicate with in this case the person say by the way this this
happens so yes i struggle yes. And hopefully build new evidence.
And the right person can help you build new evidence.
I agree.
Which is what my girlfriend helped me to do.
She helped me to build,
without, by just being herself and not being a prison guard,
she created new evidence.
And that new evidence is strong.
It's not, the old evidence is still there.
I don't actually think the old
evidence will ever go oh i love that you say that steven i really do because i think it's again this
idea that it has to go completely before we step into the other one and i think that's what holds
people back from fully stepping into their new identity because they think if I'm really supposed to be here and this
is actually real and I have all of this new evidence that's not supposed to be there at all
and I think again those multiple truths they can coexist it's just what you choose to feed
over and over again yeah and you know if you think of spiders like I'm not scared of spiders
but there's a part of me that goes
there's a lot of evidence because i've seen other people running away from them i've seen films yes
but i'm not i know like objectively i've got enough evidence to say that the spiders they
don't even bite yeah you know no one's dying of spiders really but i'm still there's still a
little bit of evidence that be careful you know and i can exist with those two truths as you as
you describe it you're
totally right though in the sense that people expect them that they will get to a place where
they are healed and cured completely and i i just have never seen it me neither me neither i've never
seen it ever and i think we have a current culture actually so i'm a i'm a coach and consultant and speaker, et cetera,
who's in the realm of self-help,
but despises the self-help industry for a multitude of reasons because I think it perpetuates that idea,
that idea of healing as if it's a destination.
You know, you sign up for this course, get this book,
listen to this podcast, and then it's done,
then you're healed. So I think there's a lot of people that are in a very good place,
if you were to look at it in a very holistic way, but continuously believe that they have to
rid themselves of these very human things and this, you know, inevitable human discomfort
that we all experience and they put labels on it to make it you know mean like it's this um so yeah i think there's a cult there is a culture right now where
people are on this continuous journey of healing when actually some of these things won't actually
go away completely and that's fine that's normal it's an interesting thing because there are some
people out there as well i want to get your take on this sure i've basically made healing their identity uh-huh it's their personal brand
it's their safe space being broken and healing is there it's who they are and they've embraced
that is that harmful and dangerous in your view absolutely i think it is i think it is because
it's it again perpetuates another idea which ties this, that we need to be on this pursuit of constantly fixing something, you know.
And I think I've also seen people do that in the, as you say it as a brand, but people making it, yeah, making it the actual business, their public persona.
This is who I am. And I think it encourages other people or makes other people feel that they need
to do the same thing or that they need to sort of make their pain, their identity as well.
You also see this with people who are contrarian just for the sake of being contrarian, right?
I think that's why you... just have to disagree they just have to disagree with
and they usually that's why when i talk about um you know this kind of seemingly a battle between
the woke versus anti-woke i always see that essentially they're quite the same they're
exactly the same you will have the people that are for example anti-woke want to be contrarian
for the sake of it you know screaming about how woke everyone has got. If people are, let's say,
talking about being inclusive, they'll just label that as woke. It's the exact same behavior as they
claim to oppose, which I find very interesting, how people can be so loud about something and be so convicted and be wanting to point out a specific type of behavior,
not realizing that they're behaving in the exact same way. But I think it is part of that
performance where people are being rewarded because they're performing in a very specific way.
And they see that, okay, if I perform in this way, I'm going to get likes, I'm going to get
opportunities. I get to sort of feel, it really feeds the ego as well when you have your echo chamber and you have people that say yes
to everything you have people that see you as some sort of um leader but I think it's building some
very interesting characters online especially I wonder if both extremes so the far left and the
far right I wonder if they're just both low self-esteem.
Yes.
Because they're the ones that seem to need the reinforcement.
So I will be militant about these views because by being further over here,
I'm getting more people that are clapping for me.
Whereas nuance seems to be a place where you don't care as much about the clapping.
You're not really doing it for the clap.
You're doing it, in my view, more for yes yes I I see that a lot and have you found um would you say I think from
listening to everything you've said I I kind of have an idea of what this would look like for you
but would you say that you're more in that nuance would you say you've always been more in the
middle or have you ever found yourself on either I used to think I was over on the left. Now I think I'm somewhere in the middle. So I can't,
what you described earlier is like an intolerance of ideas. It's, you know, and both, both extreme
sides. So the far left, the far right are both just really intolerant. And I, and they're not
willing to have a conversation with anybody so I find myself
being pushed more towards the center point where I find people like me people like you yeah I think
I don't know where you consider yourself yeah the exact same I you know what I don't think I've ever
um even used language like I'm on the left or anything like that. And maybe there's something
about being an immigrant, because when I speak to immigrants and people that are not from this
country, I think we have a different relationship with politics in general. You will never really
hear most people saying they're on the left or they're on the right. I think it won't really
happen. Most people are, the majority of people really are in that center,
in that middle ground. I would say, if you were to look at my values and what I stand for
objectively, yes, I'm a left-leaning person, but I don't make that my identity. I don't look at
everything on that side and say, okay, check, check, check. I agree with that. Everything is
context dependent. And there are many things that I agree with from different sides because I just look at what is the context what are we talking about does this make sense to me is this
applicable in real life um so that's the sort of process that I take myself through and it's neither
left or right it's very much in the middle like everyone like the majority of people yeah I think
the majority of people probably are but but i think
especially in this day and age it takes it's much probably easier because you get to fit in if you're
on either side yes there's no club in the middle yeah there's no you know what i mean there's no
uniform yeah in the middle so you don't you don't those that might want to fit in and be reinforced
by um a group aren't going to find that in the middle ground yeah pick a side do you see what
i mean it's like yeah it's a club they have you know a uniform they have stickers they have like a
schedule they have a doctor in they have 10 commandments yeah this is why people join cults
isn't it it's true and you know what um speaking of cults when i wrote when i wrote my open letter
um why i'm leaving the cult of wokeness i was really trying to have this conversation
because essentially i i was speaking about what we're talking about now an invitation into that
middle ground where most people are inviting people to acknowledge nuance and context to
really realize that black people for example we don't all think the same. We have very different
experiences. We have very different opinions. We have very different beliefs, worldviews.
Most people that identify as being on the left would not have that conversation with me. It's
only just starting to happen now. The only people that would be willing to have those conversations
with me would be people that would be seen to have those conversations with me would be people
that would be seen as being on the right.
And I found that very interesting that, you know, when you look at being a leftist, it
is about being tolerant.
It is about, well, I guess that would be, what would that be?
Would it be classic liberalism?
I guess so, right?
But even that approach is seen as right wing now so i understand
why a lot of people really are getting pushed out of the left and more into the center because
most people would not have that conversation with me because the moment you critique something from
the left you're labeled as being on the right which is just just the most absurd thing I have ever heard. But I think now,
two years on, things are starting to shift a little bit more. I think people have stopped
being so fearful of what is known as cancel culture, even though I prefer to call it
collective sabotage, because I think that's a much more accurate term for it. I think people
are being less afraid now to ask questions,
to be like, actually, let's hear what this view actually is.
We don't have to agree with it,
but we can at least acknowledge that it exists.
But I think people that are on the right,
from my own experience,
especially if we're talking about media, et cetera,
have been more willing to have these conversations
and to have more debates
and to honor that gray more than the left.
I've, you know, I've probably had thousands of tweets from people telling me that I cannot speak
to that person on my podcast, right? Thousands of tweets. And I promise you, I've never had
those tweets from someone on the right. No matter which guest I get on or what they believe,
no one from the right has said, Steve, you cannot platform that person right it's never happened so and that that again
you're not help you're you're you're you're basically going to punish me if i don't um say
think and have conversations that are in line with your doctrine yeah and for me that for me has been
alienating and this is why i now consider myself more in the middle because I don't agree with that intolerance.
I think I should be able to have a conversation
with anyone, including Donald Trump.
Right.
I hope I never get to the point
where I would not be willing to have a conversation.
Conversation.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
That reminds me of like the, I don't know, 18th century.
I know nothing about history,
so I just named an old century.
Reminds me of the 18th century
when they used to like burn books
because they didn't even want people to hear stuff yes and yes anyway speaking
of controversial topics one of the things that's become surprisingly controversial over the last
couple of years is and probably for a little while longer um since the 17th century um is this idea
of accountability which to me seems like much of the antidote to self-sabotage. It's
like taking personal responsibility for your life and your situation. I've heard you talk about this.
I actually think this was the first, the first, one of your first videos that caught my attention
was you talking about taking responsibility in a really, you know, a fairly direct way. So tell me
how taking responsibility, what that means to you, but how that helped you
to rise out of that phase you had from 14 to 24. Yeah. Oh, it was huge. It was huge. And it had to
be one of the first things that I did. Actually, as I, as I think about this and sort of speak out
loud, I think what allowed me to get and stay sober that eighth and final time was taking personal responsibility. I think
all of the other times I had wanted to place blame on a lot of things outside of me. So my dad
would have been the easiest person because he was an alcoholic and because of his abuse and because
of everything we experienced and because of the instability, because of coming to a new country, moving to a part of the UK where just me,
my sister and Curtis are the only black kids, the adversity I experienced from that. So I think there
were so many ways that I could externalize, right? But I think the moment that I was able to say,
okay, well, Africa, what part did you have to play in this? So you've experienced all of this adversity. What now?
What fucking now?
No one else can do it for you.
And I think that helped me so much.
And another thing that I had to do,
which is a part of that responsibility and accountability,
was making amends.
So people that have followed the 12-step program, for example, will know that making amends is a huge part of it.
I didn't follow the 12-step program. What's the 12-step program, for example, will know that making amends is a huge part of it. I didn't follow the 12-step program.
What's the 12-step program?
So 12-step is AA, essentially, Alcoholics Anonymous.
You go through a process, a 12-step process of accountability, essentially.
And one of those steps is making amends,
reaching out to the people that you've harmed and making amends. And that's what I had
to do. And I really did that. And there was a lot of shame. There was a lot of guilt. There were a
lot of people that didn't want to hear it, but there were a lot of people that were very grateful
that even after all of these years, I'm coming to them and acknowledging something that I did
or played a part in. And only then could I actually move forward with my sobriety,
knowing that I am responsible. Yes, I've experienced a lot of adversity, but I am the
one that gets to decide what now. So fast forward to finding ourselves in a culture where even just
conversations around personal responsibility have been politicized because I've noticed they're labeled as right wing.
The moment, isn't that weird?
It's mad.
Isn't that crazy?
The moment you say,
you do realize there is a lot in your life
that you can control.
You're called a bigot.
I'm a puppet and I'm a victim and there's nothing i can control it's
and it's that political party that did this yeah okay so yeah
and that that is unfollowed
it's fucking crazy it's mad and i think i've I speak to my family and my friends about all of these things quite a lot, actually. And because I'm still very much in touch with everyone back home in Zimbabwe. And because I have that perspective, when I compared to that part of the world to the Western world, this just seems like a completely different world, like some kind of show. It can't be real. That people can get
upset to know that there are things in your life that you can control. Yes, you might have
experienced X, Y, and Z, but you are responsible for how you move forward. Yes, there might be
other components. Maybe it is the system. Maybe it is your familial environment, whatever the
details might be, but there are also things within your control
the fact that people can label that as being bigoted the moment you say i i just wouldn't
you want that to be the case wouldn't you want to have things that you can control the thought of
being powerless yeah my circumstances is the most terrifying thing in the world you know being a
being a being that's
why I refer to it as a puppet that someone else is pulling these strings right and I have no I'm
powerless to my situation so I think it's I find it empowering and liberating to say do you know
there is a lot of things I can control yes I'm I'm broke yes I'm in this situation but there are
there's something that I can do yeah and I have to also express the nuance that you did which is
there are a lot of people that are um did which is there are a lot of people that
are um that are disabled there are a lot of people that have found themselves in
horrifically unfortunate circumstances through no fault of their own yes but i find it really
important for my sanity of mind and my optimism for the future to know that there is something
often there is something that i can do to change my situation. That's a controversial idea.
Imagine that.
Would you have thought that? And I can hear the people typing out,
you fucking bastard, you fucking.
Easy for you to say.
Yeah, rich motherfucker with his car.
What is it though?
Do you think you know what that is?
Yeah, because it holds a mirror up to you.
It makes you feel like, for some people,
and I think it was for me at some point as well,
holding that mirror up and saying,
do you know what?
I might've had part to play in this
and I'm actually,
I can have a part in getting out of this situation.
For some people, it's evidence of their inadequacy
that they just don't have the self-esteem to confront.
So it's easier to blame.
Blame is a nice shield.
It's a nice way to deflect the attack
against my already fragile self-esteem.
I would do that, of course, when I was younger
and someone might point at something.
Blame was a way for you not to hit me in the self-esteem.
It was a way of saying, no, no, no, no, no.
That's not because I'm inadequate
or because I'm not capable or I'm not smart
or because I'm not working hard.
It's because of this other thing.
And so leave me alone, Africa.
Blocked.
Yes.
It's like, do you know what I mean?
That's my analysis of it often.
For some people, it feels like evidence of their inadequacy.
Yes.
And why would someone not like that?
Well, because it makes you feel like shit.
Yeah.
And I think because we're also being encouraged,
especially the younger generation,
who I really now more than ever want to make more of an effort to really speak directly to them,
is because I think we're sort of training each other
to not prioritise emotional resilience
because along with personal responsibility,
resilience is also
another controversial word, you know, this, this idea that you can build a strong foundation within
yourself that even if something happens externally outside of you, you are able to deal with it.
You don't have to go into that deep, dark place and think that is it full stop so I think because most people are not emotionally
resilient and are not nurturing and sort of cultivating that within themselves it continues
that cycle where you just end up in perpetual victimhood and then we are in a culture that
rewards victims you know and I think self-correction there, actually, and I want to make this very clear, that there is a very real difference between being a victim, someone who has genuinely been
victimized, and making victimhood an identity. There's a huge difference between the two.
But I think when you start to make victimhood an identity for anything and everything,
that's when it might be time to actually hold a mirror up to yourself.
On that word resilience,
I think the reason why resilience is,
in part at least,
why it's a controversial topic
is because it kind of starts to merge
into the lane of like mental health.
And people, when they think of resilience,
they think of like, shut up and deal with it.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
And then that acts in conflict to the narrative of like express yourself feel your emotions it's okay to be
not okay yeah so talk to me about the distinction you make between those two things and your
relationship with both you know what I guess this is where I would bring it back round
to holding those multiple truths because why do we think that we have to choose between one or the other why can't you be both emotionally resilient as an individual as a being and allow yourself to
express yourself and allow yourself to be vulnerable and allow yourself to have those
real low moments that we all do and i think both can coexist it's really not one or the other so
what is the opposite of resilience then?
The word weakness comes to mind,
but I don't know if that's accurate.
I don't know if that's accurate to what...
I'm not sure.
But it's interesting because the word weakness comes to mind and maybe a part of me,
or even for someone listening we we think associating the word weak to yourself means there's something wrong with you that it's
a bad word i think there's this idea that it's it's bad to be weak or it's not acceptable to
be weak but i think we all have moments of weakness but I don't
know if that would be the opposite of of resilience what do you think um so if we're talking about
emotional resilience maybe the opposite is emotional maybe fragility maybe I don't know um
it's something within that realm right yeah and the reason i i'm basically playing devil's advocate
with myself to see if to see if it is two truths or if what we were describing earlier about being
expressive and being in touch with your emotions yeah is that being emotionally fragile or is that
something else i wonder if another word that's coming to mind for some reason soft i think it's
both possible to be soft
and whatever you would consider hard
because just in very simple language,
when I hear the word resilience,
you have to be hard.
There's something sort of,
it's not necessarily stoic,
but it's sort of that kind of language
where you're really fully grounded in yourself.
Your back is straight.
You're internally up, you know,
whereas the other side of that is
maybe maybe there is an element of fragility which is fine i don't i don't think it's a bad thing
allowing yourself to be soft allowing yourself to be um to not be as strong all of the time so i i
think it's interesting because on one hand you're saying be resilient but then also be the opposite
of resilience yeah yeah but it can you can be
contact there could also be context right yeah it can be context specific behavior so
you can be resilient in the sense that when someone um pelts abuse at you in your instagram
dms you have the resilience to not internalize that not let it um destroy your day or your mood
and to move on but But then you can be,
I guess, emotionally, you know, then your dog might die. I've got a lovely dog running around
somewhere here. My dog might die. And that is real cause for emotional expression and to be
emotionally, to be soft and to be open and to feel. Yes. So maybe it's context specific. Yes,
I think so. I think so. But again, I think they can both coexist.
How did you get to this place of self-awareness?
Because, you know, we all know people who are repeating cycles
and they have no, either they're taking no responsibility for it
or they just don't know that they're doing it.
And sometimes as friends, and this is again,
this is us looking in on the situation as if we know what's best for them so there's an error
there but we look we see friends family going through cycles and they don't know what they're
doing and they don't they don't understand themselves enough to the point where you are
today where you clearly um you exhibit high self-awareness and understanding of yourself
your past your behavior and the causes of it um one of
my favorite quotes that i've ever written which is based on based on a friend i had was um you can
read as many books as you like but if you can't read yourself you'll never truly learn a thing
but you can also say you can read as many books as you like but if you can't read yourself you'll
never make progress yes because you can have the information but implementing it requires
understanding the being in which you're implementing that too so
how did you become so apparently self-aware you know what I think I've always loved to read I've
always loved to read and to to hear other people's stories and to hear other people's thoughts
so one of the first people that I discovered um the eighth time that I got sober was Carl Jung.
So he's an incredible psychotherapist who explores shadow work and, you know, shadow self, etc.
And I think through his work and then finding many other teachers, many other mentors along the way, just through books, mainly books and self-study,
I was able to finally have language
for the things that I was experiencing internally. So I think it helped that I did have that
foundation of already being quite a self-aware person, but now having language for my behavior.
And I think just through different practices, even reading something about why, you know,
lying to yourself is a form of self-betrayal.
It meant that every time that I was in a situation and I could feel myself about to lie,
I would kind of challenge myself to not and to just say something different or to just say what
I actually mean. So I think it's been a combination of self-study, reading, tuning into the self
awareness I already had, but using it in just a different way and actually stepping into the self-awareness I already had but using it in just a different way and
actually stepping into the arena and practicing so I think that that has helped me kind of developed
my sense of self over time what about writing and writing writing has always helped but you
know what's interesting I found especially in those 10 years I would write in my journal as
if someone was going to read it so I would lie what were you lying about in your diary
oh that's a good question I was lying about how I really felt about my relationship so I was writing
as if my boyfriend at the time would read it. So I wasn't being completely honest about how unhappy I was.
I wasn't being honest about cheating in our relationship when I was drunk.
I wasn't being honest about my relationship with alcohol.
I wasn't being honest about how I really felt about one particular family member
who I really wanted to heal things with um but it felt weird because we we didn't speak about
emotional things in my family so there was a lot of resistance around meddling that relationship
even though I knew exactly what I needed to do.
Why do you speak of that in past tense?
Which part?
About that family member mending it.
You speak of it as if it's past tense.
What exactly did I say?
Just you're referring to it as if you haven't mended it.
I haven't.
Right.
I haven't.
And I wrote that entry. It's in the journal that I found the other day.
Thank you for pointing that out.
I haven't.
It's been seven years since I wrote that.
So maybe now I'm going to have to do it.
It's bothering you.
I can see it in your face.
Really?
Yeah.
It does.
It does.
Because she was on that list of amends that I had to make back in 2016. And I made amends with everyone on that
list apart from her. And I see her quite often. And there'll be times where I feel like I want
to say something because there's not even anything specific that happened. It's just the way that I was behaving at the time that I was in the height of my destruction.
And she had just moved from Zimbabwe to here.
And I was always her favorite cousin.
And we were so close and she was so excited to see me and to see me after all of these years.
And when she came, she didn't meet the me that she remembered.
And I noticed that very early on.
And now we're much older, seven years later,
I can still see that there's a part of her that feels hurt in some way.
And I know that there's something that I can do
and say to sort of break that.
But I just, there's a lot of resistance around it
because in my family,
there are just certain conversations we don't have.
But I've been starting to have those conversations
with some family members,
but she's just the one person
that I haven't done it with yet.
Why? family members but she's just the one person that i haven't done it with yet why i think there's almost a fear of the unknown of what our relationship will look like beyond this
and i know it can sound mad because someone listening to this might think just have the
conversation i'm a huge advocate for conversations that are uncomfortable but when it listening to this might think, just have the conversation. I'm a huge advocate for conversations that are uncomfortable.
But when it comes to this, for whatever reason,
there's a fear of the unknown.
Even though I know that the unknown is going to be
potentially a stronger relationship.
So you could say there's always an element of self-sabotage
when it comes to this, but it's a fear of some kind
of unknown around that any advice well i i i mean i struggle with the same thing so let's not pretend
that i am perfect in this arena but what some of the advice that sometimes helps reframe the
decision is you know taking myself to the to my deathbed and thinking
about the decisions i would if this was if i was laying there and this was the last moments of my
life would i what decision would i wish i would have made on this particular situation yeah that's
quite clarifying and it also it also cuts out this kind of unconscious feeling that i think we all
have that there'll always be time to do it yes we can always do it next year but we don't live forever unfortunately right we live under
the illusion that we do that's why there's a sand timer on there it's just a nice reminder to me
that I'm actually not infinite I'm finite and so that gives me a little bit of urgency to make
um to live in a less petty way in a more uh a way that's more aligned with like my inner truth and
my inner value so yeah what would
you you know if this were if you were touch wood diagnosed with something today and you thought
you know what gonna get my home in order would you have that conversation I would absolutely have
that conversation and you know what I'm grateful very grateful that you and I have just had this
exchange because when I found that journal a few days ago
and I saw that entry saying I need to speak to her I wrote I'm going to do this this week and I
finished the entry with if I don't do this I'll never know what our relationship can be
I'm going to do this this week and it was seven years ago
I'm gonna fucking do it this week you're gonna get a message from me
she no longer talks to me uh she's blocked me on Instagram
that's what the unknown was about wow my goodness and you know again what you've just done is hold a mirror up to because i can
feel a sort of tightness in my chest but i also feel kind of like a relief in my shoulders at
the same time so it feels quite conflicting but it makes sense um because you've just held a mirror
up to me because in every other area of my life whether
it's business or life or writing i'm very sure i can have any type of conversation i'm very
assured and confident and know exactly what i need to do but it's amazing how in certain areas
there's still that sort of childlike oh i can't i can't do this it's too much that's too big that's why having
someone even in a brief exchange that can hold a mirror up to that part of you and just ask
just one question without asserting or trying to put forward a specific thing you should do
um just a question that can kind of make you think oh I hadn't actually thought about that
I mean I've got those things in my life too so like of course I have I've got conversations that
I just we all we put off for various reasons and yeah I think one of the things as well that I that
I often ask myself is like if you get too tied up in the outcome and it all comes becomes outcome
dependent what are they going to say how is's it going to be? You probably never make the decision,
but if it becomes based on like,
why do I need to do this for myself?
Yeah.
Irrespective of outcome.
You know what I mean?
Then you start living more in your truth.
And the second point I was going to say
is that tightness in your chest.
It's an interesting thing
because whenever we find ourselves
in those situations
where something is making us uncomfortable
or, you know, you described it
as a tightness in the chest.
Yeah. The tightness in the chest is not gonna um doesn't leave us because we
ignore it it just it it's like this little insidious force inside of us that will eat us up
in little ways and we think often as i have in my past that if i just suppress or compartmentalize
that right it will that's the best way to deal with it i think the way that we release whatever
that tightness the tightness in the chest is such a good indicator it means we've got work to do
right right because i was thinking about that analogy like that conversation didn't put the
tightness in your chest the tightness was already there yeah the tension was already there yes you
just just came to the surface yes so the way to never have the tightness again is to release
the thing the thing the unaddressed yeah one of the things i've heard you talk about a lot is your
your journey and your evolving relationship with sex and sexuality and how that changed from when
you were very young through the period when you
were drinking a lot um till today can you talk to me about that evolution and what you've learned
about those topics that might benefit me yes absolutely so
i'm going to sort of keep referring to my sobriety in that period of my life because it was so transformative and it revealed so much to me, so much that I could have never imagined at the time.
So something that also happened when I got sober, I think this was about a year into my sobriety, I realized just how much sexual shame I was holding so much of it and I
Initially sort of wanted to fix it wanted to do something about it. What are some surface level things that I can do?
What can I read? What can I sort of dive into? How can I deal with it from where I am now?
As a 25 year old
But I quickly realized that I actually had to trace it back to see where it
even comes from. And I realized just like so many things, it did come from my childhood. Being
raised in a Christian home, I learned again, not directly, more so indirectly, that being a sexual
being was not something that was of God. It was not something that was supposed to be a part of who I am.
Pleasure was never discussed.
Sex was never discussed.
Even intimacy in general.
I never saw my parents hold hands.
I never saw my parents hold hands.
I never saw them kiss.
I never saw them hug.
I never saw any sort of affection.
But I knew that they loved each affection but I knew that they loved
each other I knew that they cared about each other but affection and intimacy I just never saw that
not for a moment did you see that growing up um it's a really interesting one because
I'd say I'd say yes and no so I say yes because below the age of maybe eight,
maybe I've got memories of that.
And then above the age of 10, no.
And I call my parents by their first names.
And I've really struggled with intimacy
because of the exact same reasons.
Like even the word best friend made me cringe
until the age of, still kind of makes me cringe now.
Me too.
Yeah, really. Like when people would say or call me their best friend this is part of me
like it's just a bit even boyfriend would make me like prison
me too that's why when i found the word partner i was like okay
that feels that feels much better we stand next to each other. We don't.
Oh my goodness.
So when I sort of wanted to really understand where a lot of the sexual shame was stemming from,
or just more so even outside of sex, intimacy.
Intimacy, feeling very disconnected to other people
when it came to intimacy, but also from myself.
I realized that I could only be expressive as a sexual being
if I was drunk or if I was high, if I was in that place where, of course, my inhibitions are low,
but I had no insecurities. I didn't have to feel like I'm doing something wrong. I didn't have to
feel like my pleasure was wrong. But then when I got sober, all of those things came to the surface. And then I had to look that in the eye.
So that also became something that I started sharing over time as well as sort of sharing my journey with sobriety.
I then started sharing the things that were revealed as a byproduct of me getting sober.
And sexual shame was a huge one, was a big part of that.
My relationship with sex has evolved a lot over time.
I think it was early, in my early years, influenced by porn.
Yes, me too.
That's the way I went into the game.
I just went in trying to be those male porn stars.
And I think over time, and I think there's this wider issue in our society,
specifically, I've got to be honest, with men.
Yes. wider issue in our society specifically i've got to be honest with men yes um what they think that
what they think sex is in terms of this kind of very aggressive often dominating transactional
um encounter yeah and then there's again i'm just i'm just talking freely i don't give a
fuck what i please do but i'm seeing I'm seeing a lot in my close friends,
they're often in relationships, not all of them,
where they're having problems
with their sexual relationship with their partner.
They're basically saying things to me.
And I'd say, this is crazy.
I'd say 75 to 80% of my male friends are saying,
my partner doesn't want to have sex.
She doesn't like having sex.
And I was there at 1.2.
My partner said that to me at 1.2.
Yeah.
And I took it on face value.
I thought they don't like sex.
What I came to learn is that wasn't true.
But what I'd learned to be sex and what I was bringing as sex,
this kind of aggressive, you know, whatever, was not the language that they spoke.
Right.
And I feel like I'm surrounded by men that need to start seeing sex as a language.
Because then you can ask yourself, well, actually, she's speaking Spanish and I'm speaking English.
That's fine.
It's not she doesn't like English.
She just doesn't.
She speaks a different language.
Yes.
That's a lot. I'm just dumping that on you no no no no that resonates so and I'm really glad that
you said this because I think you're speaking something that is on so many people's minds or
something that they've just never really put language to and a big part of my awakening if
you will and really addressing that sexual shame is because I also learned
sex from porn at 10 years old, 10 years old. So by the time that I had sex for the first time,
when I was 14, it was very much like a porn performance to put it very simply. And I speak
to so many people, men and women about this very specific thing. A lot of us learn that we should perform, that sex should be
driven by orgasm and ejaculation and this sort of production, if you will, which is not actually
accurate for most people when it comes to what really actually feels pleasurable, especially
for women. So I started to realize when I got sober that every time that I was having sex, for example, I faked every single orgasm. It was all a before I didn't know much about my body because I'd learned from
porn. And because the men that I was with had also learned from porn, we were just in a performance
and no one's actually talking about it. Right. So in times when I was in relationships and I made
myself think, I don't want to have sex, I don't want to have sex anymore.
It actually was not that I didn't want to have this type of pornified sex.
That's what I actually meant.
So what you just said is really important.
And I realized that's when I found tantric sex.
Yeah.
That's when I found tantric sex around 2018, because I realized that I had always felt like sex was being done to me.
Yes.
That I was not a part of it.
And that is how most women feel.
I felt like I needed to apologize on behalf of men.
Yeah, because that's what I came to learn.
Yeah.
Was that the reason why the person I was with had turned around to me and said,
I don't like having sex.
And when we got talking about it after I acted like, I mean, let me be clear.
The first time she said that, I did not understand.
My little chimp Neanderthal monkey brain went, like I was emasculated by it.
It made me feel, is this something that I was, I didn't do right.
Ego steps in of course ended up
breaking up with this person got back with this person a year later when i was maybe a bit more
mature i apologized and i said i want to have a conversation and i also said to her that i'm
going to be here regardless of whether we have sex or not yes and then she could she had a safe
enough space to start talking to me about it and what i discovered is she'd been with she'd had
three previous
boyfriends over the course of seven years. Her view of sex was this person comes and takes from
you, treats you like this object. And she was with him for five years, treats you like an object,
takes what they want from you. And then he was actually going and cheating on her as well.
Right.
So not only was he taking, he was then like hurting her. And that cycle just repeated.
Her relationship with what sex is is was really, really toxic.
She didn't like that.
Yes.
She didn't want that anymore.
Yes.
And that's what she and me probably referred to as this word sex.
So it was kind of like learning a new language of sex and what it actually is.
Yes.
She went from the place of like, I don't want to have sex anymore,
to absolutely loving to have sex. Yes. I didn't think it was possible. I thought if they don't have sex anymore to absolutely loving to have sex yeah i
didn't think it was possible i thought if they don't like sex dump them yeah you know i'm gonna
go find someone that will right that will let me take yes and you know what you you've articulated
that so beautifully in terms of sex being a language and it's going to look different for
every single person because something that i realized is that I could tell when I was with a man sexually, I could tell if they were sort of,
if it was like a script, almost like a play by play, like this is exactly the method we do this,
we do that switch into this switch into that. It wasn't sort of flowing and very intuitive as to
what's actually needed in that moment,
which reminded me of porn. And I would also realize actually, and this is something that I've spoken about so much because I ended up starting a sexual wellness company called Cherry
Revolution over time. And I realized that even some of the positions I would get in
were very much like porn because certain positions in porn are like that because
the camera is there, not because it's comfortable, because that's the shot for the viewer to be able
to see it. So when I started to see that I'm starting to replicate this in my most intimate
private moments, but we're both doing it, I made myself believe that I didn't enjoy sex. So then drinking and drugs and everything
that came with it, I felt like those were the moments that I could be fully expressive without
needing to perform, which is very interesting because you would think it would be the opposite,
that I would then perform more. But I felt as if I could actually speak my mind. If I didn't enjoy
something, can we try this? Can I do this
instead? Or I just want to give or I just want to receive. Can we be slower? And then when I was
sober, I felt like I couldn't say those things. Because if I say it to you as my partner,
I might be emasculating you. I might be embarrassing you. You might think something
is wrong. So I would just perform and you're performing as well. And then it just causes a huge disconnect.
So tantric sex was the first thing that I came across that made me realize and really articulated that sex is actually not a specific destination.
Did you know that you can actually enjoy sex without ejaculation, that you can have a full body orgasm, that you can be very slow, that foreplay can be the main
thing that you do, that you can experience orgasm without penetration. Just so many different ways
of articulating that experience of sex. And it's just that, an experience. And that changed so much
for me. It's such a sort of a narrative violation for so many people who've spent their whole life
watching porn and then recreating it.
This idea that you can have an orgasm from touch, that you can use energy to cause someone orgasmic pleasure.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a really important topic that I think people need to talk about a lot more.
And I think just saying to someone that's listening to this, that might be in a relationship where they're in a sexless relationship.
Yes.
Just proposing the idea that what if you both just speak,
just say there was 10 languages.
What if you're just speaking the wrong language?
Right.
You know what I mean?
And what approach would you then take?
You'd probably try and learn the language.
Yes, yes.
And also communicate to them what language you speak
and see how you can be bilingual, I guess.
You know what? It reminds me of, are you familiar with love languages and that whole thing?
Yes.
I realized that a lot of people expect someone to give in the way that they like to receive, you know?
So no one really says, okay, how do you like to receive love?
How do you like to give love?
And the moment that I started asking those questions,
even though I, believe me, I fucking cringed in the beginning.
I'm like, really?
Am I going to ask?
But you get used to it.
Yeah, and if they run off, good.
Yeah, Stephen, it's been a game changer
to just ask the person that I'm dating or my current partner to be like, how do you like to be loved? How do you like to receive love? And how do you like to give it? Because just those simple questions can change so much. And then you can use the same with sex. What do you like? And what do you not like? What have you changed your mind about? What do you like to do now and again? Or maybe not much sometimes how much time do you need how does your arousal actually work and I know that some people might
not know how to answer these questions for themselves so it's actually very good to start
asking yourself those questions before speaking about it with someone else these are questions
that you can just start to ask yourself before introducing them to someone else but they can they can change
so much because i think we get into relationships and make so many assumptions based on our
individual experiences and our worldview and we expect the person we're with to reflect the exact
same thing back to us but we don't we don't ask questions it comes back in many respects what we were talking about earlier this kind of binary approach to life they either fit or they don't we don't ask questions it's it comes back in so many respects what we were talking
about earlier this kind of binary approach to life they either fit or they don't uh-huh there's no
space for conversation and nuance and and and i guess um mutual development together like towards
the same this idea that you have to actually build and develop a relationship towards a place of um
satisfaction as opposed to finding your perfect
soulmate or perfect fit. I'm going to find someone that likes to have sex like I do,
that likes to talk like I do, that likes the things I do, as opposed to this kind of molding
towards being more cohesive together. I love that term mutual development. And it makes me think
actually that this is a term that can apply even outside maybe even especially outside of
romantic relationships this idea that people don't have to be perfect that they don't have to exist
in the way that i want the world to be or in how i expect them to be maybe we can actually mutually
develop a different perspective together because we're two different beings coming together
because my most successful relationship my current relationship we're two different beings coming together because my most successful relationship my current
relationship we are completely different really we don't believe the same things we don't believe
the same we don't have the same fundamental beliefs yeah the reason why it works is because
of one very simple thing communication and a very healthy high respect communication where everything
isn't an attempt to win it's
an attempt to like genuinely understand to move forward yeah and i think you can have two people
that are that went very very different things whether it's in sex or in business or their
beliefs about religion and spirituality be bound together as long as they have respectful
communication you know what i mean and i guess empathy is part of respectful communication
yeah this is a bit of a left field question, but it just came into my head.
Yeah.
Because I remember a previous guest writing this in the diary after they left.
Very left field.
What is the pain that you enjoy having?
Oh, I won't give my X rated answer.
Let me think of.
Wow.
What is the pain that I enjoy having?
I experience a lot of growing pains now more than ever now as my especially in the past i would say four years as the work that i do in the world
reaches more people and as i'm i'm constantly stretched in a lot of ways, which I really do enjoy, but it challenges my sense of self.
I think sometimes it can feel painful to shed aspects of my identity.
And I actually enjoy that.
I enjoy that because it is part of my growth process.
And this is not a PR answer or anything like it.
It's the absolute truth. I experience, there's the discomfort that I experience,
but sometimes it's painful
because it means that I have to make decisions that scare me.
It means that I have to allow myself to be fully seen
and really step into that idea of being visible.
And with visibility comes a lot of vulnerability as well so i think that is a
pain that i enjoy and will gladly accept and then the x-rated thing that i will not say that's
that's a thing that i'm not gonna no no no this one i'll keep to myself thank you we just want
to monetize this episode so yeah thank you can i can i turn the question back onto you of course you can
what is the pain that you enjoy the gym no I'm joking
no um the first answer that came to mind quite honestly was heartbreak and I tell you why because
heartbreak feels like the most intense pain that I think I've ever experienced the most
all-consuming um like black hole that I've ever been in is just like having my heart broken but at the same time
that pain for me is evidence of so much it's evidence of my ability to feel so deeply
and so I almost feel sorry for people that never get to have a heartbreak because you never get
to feel the full what I think to be the full spectrum of your heart so it's not something that
I would ever wish for but it's something that is a real indicator that I had a chance to feel so
strongly we have a weird answer but no no no not at all not at all thank you what ideas or beliefs
do you hold to be true that pretty much everyone else disagrees with things that you are sure are true
yeah but most people I'll tell you one of the biggest ones that uh
most most people didn't like a couple of years ago when I said um that as a black person I'm
not oppressed and I mean you could say that anywhere else in the world and it'll be like, yeah, of course we understand.
But people, maybe a small minority,
but a very loud minority,
especially at that time where everything
was so overly politicized,
really didn't like me saying that
as a black person here in the Western world,
having have come from Zimbabwe, a country that is,
the population is genuinely, truly oppressed. And I know what that looks like. I'm not oppressed.
I'm not oppressed because of my race. I don't see my race as a burden. Yes, there are things that
I've experienced, a lot of adversity that I've experienced. I know the reality of what it means to live under the systems that a lot of us do in and out of the Western world.
I acknowledge all of that. And at the same time, I'm not oppressed. As a woman, I'm not oppressed.
Yes, there are oppressive systems and things that absolutely have to be questioned and looked at.
And there are many things that I advocate for where people are truly oppressed. FGM is an example. I'm a huge advocate for working with survivors of FGM,
female genital mutilation. So I work with a lot of grassroots activists. I do a lot of work around
that. So I understand what oppression looks like, sex-based oppression. But for me as a woman i as an individual am not oppressed um and i think
a lot of people didn't like me saying that for some reason because i think some people saw it
as me undermining black people or undermining women which is very odd you know to even think
about so i think that's something that is to me
completely non-controversial that was seen as a controversial statement to make maybe because of
the climate at the time but that's one of the things that I can think of that's a decision
you're making it's a decision you're making not to feel not to pick up that label and stick it on
your chest yes I'm an oppressed person yeah why are you
making that decision I think not I think I I know why I wasn't raised to see myself as a victim
I I just wasn't culturally or in my family home or with everything that my family and I or I as
an individual have been through I have never for
one second apart from the moments where I needed to misplace my own anger and outrage and blame
onto other people around me I never saw myself as a victim to the world so I think for me it's not
even a conscious decision that I have to be like okay um it just is I I don't see myself in that
way I don't walk through the world thinking that
my skin color is a burden. I know that there are things that I might experience because of it. I'm
very aware of that. I don't ignore that. But I don't see that as the only truth or the only
side of the coin. So it's always been quite easy for me to say that. And a few years ago,
I never would have had to declare anything like that at all.
But I think something happened,
especially in the past two years,
where to even sort of see yourself as a powerful individual
means that you're taking away from other people.
Yeah.
Which is not true at all.
I've just never seen myself as a victim, ever, ever.
And I won't.
I won't do it.
Why not?
There's a real cost to that.
Just like we were talking about before,
there's a mental, emotional, spiritual cost to that.
And I just won't fucking do it.
And I think it's a lie.
It's a lie to make myself believe that I'm a victim
and that I'm oppressed and I, you know,
I'm a powerless individual. I'm oppressed and I you know I'm a powerless individual
I'm not I'm not are you no I'm not I can tell yeah yeah that's why you know it's I get asked
this question a lot when I do talks is about you know discrimination Steve obviously you know
being a guy a man that was born in Africa I've got a black mother I'm I'm I guess I don't know
what the politically correct term is so I'll say the more mixed race brown well I don't know what the
correct term is forgive me uh half cast I don't know I'm brown okay yes I think you are um did
you not experience discrimination in business I get this question a lot and to me it's it's a
fascinating question because my brain goes I don't care yeah because I can't control it anyway
yeah even if it
were I'm sure it's true I'm sure there's multiple moments in the rise of my career when I went into
boardrooms and everyone there was four times my age and white I'm sure there was um prejudices
before I even opened my mouth that acted for and probably against me the thing is I can do nothing
about them in terms of in that moment and in my day-to-day life.
I can't cure your prejudice or discrimination.
And I don't think it's my responsibility to.
What I see my responsibility is like doing the best that I can with where I am and with what I have.
And I then heard about this thing called labeling theory, where in psychology, if you're given a label, it then has a big impact on your future performance so
if I call myself um if I label myself as oppressed or at a disadvantage I will start acting like I'm
a disadvantaged person I'll show up with less confidence with more pessimism and um and all
of those things are probably going to be more harmful than the discrimination itself absolutely
so it was a it was it was a decision that like
to focus on what i can control on a on a macro level of course you fight every opportunity you
have for equality and to end systemic discrimination and to educate people better from a very early age
and to change the way that media looks and to have more black podcasters as we've done a big campaign
around and all of those things but on a day-to-day do i want to burden myself as you say with um a label which i don't think will help will serve me right help me
show up better the answer is unfortunately is no and that is my personal decision and others can
do with their life what they wish to yeah um but i don't think it will serve me and you can again
this goes back to holding two truths you can you can choose not to be oppressed but then also fight for those that 100 or fight for equality at the same time absolutely it's not
to diminish the authenticity of the issue um no and i i also another reason why i'm very fierce
about this um is because i think as we have those conversations around representation, et cetera, I think we do need to see more people,
whether it's black,
brown,
what have you,
people that are in the minority,
depending on where they are.
I think we need to see them positioned as powerful,
sovereign beings.
So the reason I'm very serious about the conversations I have and saying,
no,
I'm not oppressed.
I do know what oppression looks like.
And I will continue to champion for, as you say, equality, et cetera. But it's actually my responsibility
to claim my power as an individual who inhabits a black body. It's actually my responsibility.
This has to be a part of the representation conversation. We can't always just want black people to step
forward to talk about the struggle. Because just like you say, I started to notice actually,
that every panel that I would get invited to do all the interviews,
it would start with something along the lines of, so Africa, as a black woman,
so Africa, as a woman of color, what have you experienced you experienced nothing what if I haven't experienced
any kind of what if I don't have some kind of story because I started to find that it would
put me into a position where I would kind of feel like I have to find a story where something
but what if nothing happened you know why can't I just be seen as a writer as a consultant as a
business owner as an entrepreneur without being a black entrepreneur as a consultant, as a business owner, as an entrepreneur without being
a black entrepreneur or a black speaker or all of which I really value. And I see the importance
in recognizing those things in those specific terms. But why does it have to be positioned
in such a way where I have to look for adversity connected to my race? So I've really started to
be very firm around that and to reject that. And in interviews to say, I've really started to be very firm around that and to reject
that and in in interviews to say I'm really curious to know why you opened the question like
that you know and sometimes people don't even realize they're doing it because they've it's
just become a script you know that would be a terrifying rebuttal if I if i had asked you that i was and i was not in a minority i would be
fucking terrified right i'd be terrified because you're right there's there's almost this assumption
that you're going to be the voice of oppression on this panel so we're going to come to the yeah
yeah oppressed now and we're going to ask you about oppression right so i think there's a bit
of cognitive dissonance where then someone like me says, actually, no, I'm not oppressed.
People don't kind of know what to do with you then.
It is really, violates a bunch of narratives.
Right.
And that's a good thing.
But imagine the opposite.
Imagine them going, no, you are.
No, Africa, you are.
And don't forget that and be oppressed.
But Stephen, that happens.
Yeah, I know. That happens in some messages that you get. How can I deny? know africa you are but you and don't forget that and be but steven that happens yeah that happens
in some messages that you get how how can i deny how can you deny that you're oppressed
i've had people tell me um so that's very interesting because it tends to be white
people a lot of the time that do that because they they're kind of and in a way i sort of can
understand where they're coming from and that a way i sort of can understand where they're coming from and
that they really want to stand up for something they really believe um this idea that every
single person that fits into this identity marker thinks and behaves and has had this experience so
they don't then realize that they've become quite regressive in their quest to be progressive which is very it's very interesting
i had the most interesting conversation um about racism on twitter many years ago where um
i think the i think the trending topic of the day was like you can't speak you can't tell a black
person what racism is or something like that and so and i'm saying well no like racism can't speak you can't tell a black person what racism is or something like that
and so and i'm saying well no like racism can go both ways i i can be racist to a white person yes
i can be i can not give someone a job because they're white i can discriminate against them
purely based on their skin color i can be and this woman this this lady online was arguing with me
basically saying no white people can't tell a black person what racism is she was saying
that to me and i literally go you're telling me what racism is right now yeah and that is totally
okay yes and she apologized she went you're completely right i should never have spoken
she literally went i should never have told you what racism is she got herself caught in her own
right because she abandoned truth and she just started falling in line with this like
binary nonsense narrative that white people can't talk about racism yes what are you fucking talking about yes to be honest as well
like i'm half white right i mean so i've got this luxury i can shape shift so does that mean because
i'm half white i can only half talk about racism right because it's also racist just to say that
i'm black that's just picking one half of my identity right so see how this entire thing falls apart the more that you sort of you interrogate it
interrogate anyway you blow on it and it just fucking crumbles because it's just bullshit it's
propped up bullshit by people that are virtue signaling that just don't know what they think
or believe so they've just gone with the cult it's like yeah it's the script it's the script that's why i think um questioning and it can seem so simple but questioning can really allow you to sort of snap out of this
trance because a lot of it is it's a trance it's a script that people repeat and you regurgitate
and you accept that interrogation right it's like you wake up in the morning you go to
your like your side and then they give you the the beliefs the
174 beliefs that you have to believe and you go okay cool got it and you you don't even look at
it you just insert it in your little it's like a sim card they just put it in your brain and you
never understand why you believe these things because they're not your beliefs yeah someone
said to me one day they said um if you if you believe the same things as everybody around you
they're not your beliefs and it was a really
interesting thing because it's true that's powerful but think if you believe every if you
believe pretty much everything that everyone around you believes they are not your beliefs
they're the beliefs of the society you lived in if i moved you to germany at a certain time you
might well have had a different set of beliefs exactly you know what i mean yes or if i moved
you back to the you know my history is good so the 16th century when slavery was rife yes and you you had a slave
you might have believed a completely different set of things were okay and normal so
beliefs there's there's very little correctness to yeah to many of them if happiness is this recipe
that contains all of these essential ingredients in order for you to make the dish of happiness what is your recipe which ingredients are you currently lacking for that recipe
that's a fantastic question which ingredients am i lacking for the recipe of happiness
you said that much clearer than i did i should just use that ingredients am I lacking for the recipe of happiness?
You said that much clearer than I did. I should just use that.
Yeah, I should just. We'll retake that when she's gone.
That's a good question. Vulnerability.
Yeah.
Really? Really. I think that's surprised a lot of people yeah and it's tied
to what i mentioned around romantic relationships yeah allowing myself to be more vulnerable
i think that could
allow me to have access to layers of happiness that I haven't yet experienced.
That's what comes to mind.
But it feels like a very big question.
Because I think it makes you, well, it makes me have to think about, even just with the word lack, it makes me have to sort of turn that mirror onto myself.
Yeah, but I think honestly, I'm able to be vulnerable in so many other areas.
But if I think about the happiness that I could experience in terms of romance, vulnerability.
It's funny, when you you were thinking when you were answering
that question i was thinking about the analogy of ingredients and one of the things that
um makes a recipe go bad isn't a lack of ingredients it's the wrong quantities
yes which is probably what people call balance so if i have if i put a fourth egg and when it
says three eggs the recipe goes bad. Right.
So as I think about that in terms of balance,
you think about the scales of ingredients that you're weighing up,
you've got to get the right quantities of each ingredient in order to make a great recipe.
Sometimes I think in my case, I maybe have too much of,
I have too many eggs.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Too many eggs in the basket.
I have too much professional commitments and I don't have enough sugar,
which is maybe romance
and that kind of connection yes so maybe one can have all the ingredients there but just have the
complete wrong quantities so that's going to ruin the the recipe that's a good one we have a closing
tradition on this podcast where the last guest writes a question for the next guest what is the crazy big idea you would try if you knew you could not fail
i want to start a festival or a huge annual event that is a place for all of us to express our unthinkable thoughts.
And it's going to be a place for people to come and see what honest, raw, unfiltered, respectful,
compassionate communication looks like in real time.
And I want this to become something that is global.
I want it to become something that has a life of its own outside of me.
And I've wanted to do this for a very, very long time.
And I know that I'd be able to do it very well.
But I think it feels scary because I know that I could do it very well.
Yeah.
And I've never shared that out loud.
I'm not sure if I understand that last part.
It feels scary because I know I can do it.
Yeah.
That doesn't make a lot of sense.
To me it does.
Really?
Yeah.
And I'll tell you what I mean by that.
It's almost like that feeling that I was telling you of when I would get emails and offers to speak for half an hour, which comes so easily to me and get paid so much money.
So I would resist it because I know that I can do it.
And I know that I'm going to get rewarded so much from it, which means that there's a leap in identity that has to happen which feels quite scary so it's
almost the same with this event and this idea that I have and it's it seems as you say like it doesn't
make sense it's scary because you know that it's going to succeed it's scary because you know that
it's going to work um and something that I've had to work on over time is the fear of success yeah so this
event and this thing that I want to do is sort of linked to that it's a barrier that I have to
break and will um so yeah what a great question Africa thank you um i wanted to speak to you because i saw so much so much nuance and truth
and um importance in the way that you communicate but also what you communicate and so it's very
rare these days that i will dm someone out of the blue and say you should come on my podcast
yeah and that is just a for me that is a um a sign of how much I respect what you're doing and how important I
think it is to have conversations that are you know that are unthinkable thoughts and that are
fearless and that are um challenging whether they are right or whether they are wrong I'm a big
believer in just being able to have the conversation because I think that is the starting point of
progress where you can where two ideas can clash and then they can merge and find the truth
and move forward as maybe one shared idea.
And there's not enough of that.
There's not enough people like you that are doing that.
So I have a suspicion,
I have a very big suspicion
that you are going to be a very important voice
on a global level
and that you are going to be a star.
I really believe that because you're very rare
and it's an important rare.
It's a very important rare and it's a,
it's a, hopefully it's a flourishing type of rare,
but it's, it feels like it's become a bit
of a dying breed of rare.
And people that are willing to have conversations,
regardless of how they might be perceived
by those that receive those conversations.
So thank you for being that voice in society. And i think this is just the start of our friendship if i know that
might make you cringe because friendship please more of that we are best friends yeah let's say
okay we'll revisit that yeah we'll get there steven, thank you. You know what? I was saying to my friend, Emily,
that I was really just looking forward to this conversation
because especially in a time where everything is so heavily politicized
and people sort of lead with identity
and what it means to be a certain person,
I think I was just really looking forward to having this conversation with you
because of the work that you do beyond the work in itself,
your curiosity and your willingness to sort of learn and to be open and to change your mind and to be corrected and to also be assertive,
but to also be soft and to just allow for ideas to exist openly without disagreeing or agreeing, just hearing.
I think it's, yeah, I think it is, you know,
something that is quite rare,
but I think through conversations like this,
it actually causes a beautiful ripple effect.
So I do think this is the start of a friendship.
So thank you.
Thank you. Thanks for watching!